Capital Budgeting That Actually Makes Sense
Most business decisions fail because people guess instead of calculate. We teach you how to evaluate investments using methods that have worked for decades—no shortcuts, no fluff. Just practical financial analysis you can use right away.
See How We Teach This
Three Methods You'll Master
Every solid investment decision comes down to understanding these frameworks. We break them down so you can actually apply them—not just memorize formulas.
Net Present Value
Learn why timing matters when money changes hands. You'll calculate real cash flows and discount rates using examples from manufacturing, retail, and tech companies operating in Southeast Asian markets.
Internal Rate of Return
Figure out what percentage return a project actually delivers. We show you when IRR works brilliantly and when it misleads—so you won't make expensive mistakes your colleagues are probably making right now.
Payback Period Analysis
Sometimes you need answers fast. This method tells you how long it takes to recover your initial investment. Perfect for quick screening, but we'll show you why it shouldn't be your only tool.
Learning That Fits Your Schedule
Our autumn 2025 program runs for eight weeks. You get video lessons you can watch whenever, plus live sessions every Thursday evening where we work through real problems together.
And here's what surprised our last cohort—the group discussions turned out more valuable than the lectures. People share their actual work challenges, and suddenly you're solving problems you didn't even know you had.
We keep groups small on purpose. Around 15-20 people per session. That way everyone gets feedback on their assignments, and you're not just another face in a massive online crowd.



Who Teaches This?
I'm Siriporn Boonmee, and I spent twelve years doing capital budgeting for manufacturing firms before I started teaching. Mostly export businesses dealing with equipment upgrades and facility expansions.
The thing nobody tells you when you start out is that textbook formulas only get you halfway there. The real skill is knowing which assumptions to question and how to present findings to people who hate spreadsheets.
That's what I focus on in this course. Not just the math—though we do plenty of that—but the judgment calls that separate decent analysis from actually useful analysis.
Siriporn Boonmee, Financial Planning Instructor Ask About The Program